‘Hand to mouth’ existence
October 15 was Global Hand-Washing Day. And, hand-washing is the most effective way to prevent several diseases
Global Hand Washing Day is
celebrated on October 15 every year. Since 2008, millions of children in
thousands of schools across the country have marked the day by washing
their hands with soap following a carefully demonstrated procedure.
However, little is done beyond this day to inculcate the habit. This is
due to a lack of interest among teachers, poor hygiene education and
absence of soap, water and a place to wash.
Hand-washing
is the single most effective preventive for diarrhoea and acute
respiratory infections, leading killers of children worldwide. Studies
by different agencies and the Government show washing hands at the
correct time can prevent 47 per cent of the cases of diarrhoea and
prevent a quarter of the resultant diseases. It can also cut the risk of
respiratory tract infections by a third. As published in The Lancet,
additional research indicates that washing hands with soap can reduce
the risk of diarrhoeal diseases by 42-47 per cent and interventions to
promote hand-washing might save a million lives.
However,
people do not wash their hands with soap; in most households, soap is
available but used for bathing and washing clothes. To be effective,
this activity must be performed with ash or soap. Dirt will not do since
it does not increase the cleaning efficacy of water and may well be
contaminated with faecal matter, given that in India, some 620 million
defecate in the open.
Children most vulnerable
Even
though washing hands after defecating and before cooking or eating
sounds like common sense, most people do not wash their hands with soap
or ash. This leaves them and their children more vulnerable to disease.
Studies have recorded many different occasions for hand-washing by child
carers, children and adults. They found that washing after stool
contact was relatively rare; after cleaning a child, it was 13 per cent;
for the carer after defecation it was 14 per cent. This is significant
since children are an important reservoir of diarrhoeal pathogens and
the carer is often the person who prepares and serves food.
A
technical note by WaterAid says pathogens enter a person’s mouth from
unwashed hands directly and indirectly if the person has touched stools.
Children are especially vulnerable. Pathogens can enter through food
and water that has been handled with unwashed hands.
Schools
are the best place to promote hand-washing with soap. The mid-day meal
programme that caters to 120 million school children, is an important
vehicle for promoting hand washing with soap. This is reiterated by the
Ministry of Drinking Water Supply (MDWS) that has promoted hand-washing
with soap as a key hygiene practice. In the current sanitation campaign,
school sanitation has been handed over to the Ministry of Human
Resource Development.
Promoting the habit
These
hygienic practices, once learnt in school, can be inculcated into
household hand-washing with soap practices. A study with a sampling of
schools showed about 42 per cent of school children are aware of the
need to wash hands with soap, but only 12 per cent of schools have soap
available. Even hand-washing stations with water are in short supply.
In
recent years, there have been several attempts to inculcate the habit.
In Assam, the Public Health Engineering Department (PHED) and Unicef
worked with the North-East Diocesan Social Forum in 11 districts. In
Tamil Nadu, Gramalaya mounted a campaign with WaterAid and Water.org in
three blocks of the Tiruchirapalli districtIn Orissa, an NGO called
Udyama organised a hand-washing event for 200 children and 15 parents
and teachers. Another NGO, Pragati, held another event covering 650
students and 30 students. The Madani Welfare Association covered 5,000
people, eight schools and 15 villages. In Jammu, the Society for
Popularisation of Science and Progressive Educational Society took up
the issue. In Bhopal, the Madhya Pradesh the Energy Environment and
Development Society along with Unicef developed a mobile unit approach
to create mass awareness. This year, WaterAid India as part of its
technical assistance to the Government of Madhya Pradesh aims to get 2.3
million children in 19,000 schools of the State to wash their hands in
one hour. The challenge will be sustain the momentum created through the
year.
The writer heads the policy advocacy and research wing at WaterAid India
(This article was published on October 15, 2014)
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